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It’s May 2010 and Donald Trump is standing in a large tent on the Scottish coastline, with a crowd of people eager to hear him speak.

His attention suddenly shifts to a beautiful young woman.

She’s Katharine Brown, 23, a model recently crowned Miss Scotland (and later Miss United Kingdom). Brown is attending a news conference in Balmedie, Aberdeenshire, where the tycoon Trump — not yet campaigning to be U.S. president — wants to build the world’s greatest golf course on environmentally fragile sand dunes.

Trump moves in on Brown, lavishly flattering her and telling her she should be in the Miss Universe Pageant, which he then owned. Brown smiles cautiously, uncertain of how to respond.

“She’s beautiful!” Trump says, turning to Sarah Malone, one of his employees. “She may want to work for sales and stuff.”

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The scene is from You’ve Been Trumped, a 2011 documentary by British filmmaker Anthony Baxter that provided a backstage glimpse into how Trump makes all those big deals he brags about.

It’s all the creepier in light of recent allegations about Trump’s predatory behaviour towards women.

“I was looking to see if we had any footage of him putting Tic Tacs into his mouth, but we haven’t found it. I guess we’d call it ‘the smoking candy’ ”says Richard Phinney, a Canadian from Kingston, Ont. and Baxter’s long-time collaborator who works as screenwriter, cameraman and producer.

These and other things make You’ve Been Trumped a must watch — and also You’ve Been Trumped Too, a sequel which Baxter and Phinney are currently finishing up in a Belfast editing suite.

They hope to screen the sequel in the U.S. and Canada before the Nov. 8 presidential election, via TV, VOD and a few theatrical dates.

“People are always talking about what Donald Trump is saying. I think this film is about something that he’s been doing — and is doing now. We felt that had to be documented.”

Balmedie is where Scottish filmmaker Bill Forsyth shot the 1983 movie Local Hero, which told a much happier tale of a planned American land grab. Clips from Local Hero are interspersed through You’ve Been Trumped.

The wild and beautiful place is home to vocal and determined people, farmers and fisher folk who enjoy their splendid solitude and who resent Trump’s trampling. People like senior citizen Molly Forbes, now 92, whose late father used to plow the land and fish the area’s waters, and who spends her days raising chickens.

Other angry residents include farmer Michael Forbes, whom Trump slanders and enrages: “He lives like a pig,” Trump says of Forbes, calling his weathered home and farm “disgusting” and “a slum.”

Trump arrogantly believes that the billion pounds he’s planning to spend in the area, with a promise of creating 6,000 jobs — promises that have yet to be fully realized — buys him the right to do as he pleases.

The Scottish government overturned the local council’s blocking of Trump’s project, arguing that employment needs trump ecological concerns. The police stop the locals from interfering as Trump’s workers tear into sand tunes, rip up trees and knock over fences.

In a scene worthy of a doc by Michael Moore (who praises the film), Trump receives an honourary degree from a local university, even as protesters rally outside. Trump dismisses the protesters as “two people and a dog.”

The film catches him clownishly prevaricating at every turn, while claiming to be “a very truthful person.” He even sports the red baseball cap that has become the symbol of his presidential campaign.

But the film and its sequel aren’t just for shock value. Phinney said he and Baxter hope they can help convince American voters not to choose Trump, by showing how he’s as brutish a businessman as he is a person.

“We decided to make the new film because Anthony was astonished to find that Molly Forbes, the elderly woman in the first film who is now even more elderly, still doesn’t have her water supply,” Phinney says from Belfast.

“It’s because of that break in the water pipe, which we showed in You’ve Been Trumped. The break was caused by Trump’s trucks, which crushed the pipe that feeds Molly’s well and others. Trump’s people never fixed it properly, although they claimed they had. It just seems incredible that a guy could be running for president and still be responsible for this situation with a 92-year-old woman.”

Trump’s Scottish golf course development may never be as helpful to the people of Scotland as he promised it would be. It has yet to become fully operational and the big-money golfers from North America haven’t shown up in the projected multitudes.

But it’s sure to be helpful to Trump’s bottom line, Phinney says.

“Essentially, Trump bought this land that was never supposed to be developed on. And he now has planning permission for a massive housing development, too. So the land is worth immeasurably more than it was when he bought it.”

You’ve Been Trumped Too shows Trump bragging about how he always gets what he wants: “I’m the king of permits! I can always get a permit! That’s why I got rich!”

Trump’s behaviour was shocking when You’ve Been Trumped came out a few years ago. Now it seems sadly familiar after nearly 18 months of watching him sully the American political landscape in his bid to be President.

“When we were editing our first film, there were things that we wondered if we could get away with,” Phinney says.

“But now people know what the situation is.”

Peter Howell is the Star’s movie critic. His column usually runs Fridays.

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